Here's something worth watching: Indian equities are heading into year-end territory with their worst performance gap against other Asian markets in roughly three decades. What's dragging things down? Two main culprits—a weakening rupee and consistent outflows of foreign capital. When you've got currency pressure working against you while international investors are simultaneously pulling money out, that's a double whammy for any market trying to keep pace with regional peers. The rupee depreciation is making imported goods and foreign investments less attractive on a relative basis, while the foreign outflows signal investor caution about near-term prospects. This kind of extended underperformance relative to the broader Asian landscape doesn't happen often—which is exactly why it's worth paying attention to how these dynamics might ripple across emerging market sentiment more broadly.
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BridgeJumper
· 11h ago
The Indian stock market has indeed underperformed this wave, with the worst performance in 30 years... Rupee depreciation + foreign capital withdrawal, a double blow.
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MetaverseVagrant
· 11h ago
The Indian stock market really can't hold up anymore, with the rupee devaluation and capital outflows, a double whammy.
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BlindBoxVictim
· 11h ago
India's current situation is really disappointing, with the worst performance in thirty years, rupee depreciation, and foreign capital withdrawal—it's a double blow.
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TokenStorm
· 11h ago
Rupee devaluation + foreign capital withdrawal, this combination punch really can't be sustained by India. The worst performance in thirty years is not just talk... Is anyone tracking on-chain data? I calculated the risk factor on the Indian side yesterday; the liquidation price level is a bit dangerous.
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MetaReckt
· 12h ago
The Indian stock market is about to hit a 30-year low, with the rupee depreciating and capital outflows, a double blow... Is it possible that India is about to face pressure?
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TommyTeacher
· 12h ago
India's rupee move this time really has the entire emerging market worried.
Here's something worth watching: Indian equities are heading into year-end territory with their worst performance gap against other Asian markets in roughly three decades. What's dragging things down? Two main culprits—a weakening rupee and consistent outflows of foreign capital. When you've got currency pressure working against you while international investors are simultaneously pulling money out, that's a double whammy for any market trying to keep pace with regional peers. The rupee depreciation is making imported goods and foreign investments less attractive on a relative basis, while the foreign outflows signal investor caution about near-term prospects. This kind of extended underperformance relative to the broader Asian landscape doesn't happen often—which is exactly why it's worth paying attention to how these dynamics might ripple across emerging market sentiment more broadly.